08-09-2014, 10:26 AM
Well, I didn't think they'd be pummelled with cream filled doughnuts to be sure.
Torture is torture, what did people expect? That's why it was outlawed internationally, and that's why in 2002, Bush withdrew America from the International Court of Justice in the Hague, in order to avoid being guilty of war crimes. Mind you, he still was (quite rightly) found guilty of war crimes, along with Blair, Cheney and Rumsfeld at the Kuala Liumpur War Crimes Commission in November 2011.
I love the bit below about the doctor present making sure the tortured did not actually die - just nearly so. So good to see the hypocritical oath in practise in medicine. Did anyone get the docs name so he could be disbarred and his name sent to Kuala Lumpur for inclusion in any cases of future prosecutions?
Torture is torture, what did people expect? That's why it was outlawed internationally, and that's why in 2002, Bush withdrew America from the International Court of Justice in the Hague, in order to avoid being guilty of war crimes. Mind you, he still was (quite rightly) found guilty of war crimes, along with Blair, Cheney and Rumsfeld at the Kuala Liumpur War Crimes Commission in November 2011.
I love the bit below about the doctor present making sure the tortured did not actually die - just nearly so. So good to see the hypocritical oath in practise in medicine. Did anyone get the docs name so he could be disbarred and his name sent to Kuala Lumpur for inclusion in any cases of future prosecutions?
Quote:Al-Qaeda suspects were brought to the 'point of death' during 'real torture' by CIA
US Senate's forthcoming 'Torture Report' will 'deeply shock' people
IAN JOHNSTON
Sunday 07 September 2014
At least two al-Qaeda suspects were brought to the "point of death" during "real torture" by CIA officials following the 9/11 attacks, a security source has claimed.
The insider said Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, allegedly the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Centre and Pentagon, and at least one other person were not simply waterboarded, which is designed to simulate the sensation of drowning.
"They weren't just pouring water over their heads or over a cloth," the source told The Daily Telegraph.
"They were holding them under water until the point of death, with a doctor present to make sure they did not go too far. This was real torture."
The US Senate is planning to publish a 3,600-page document dubbed the Torture Report spelling out what happened to al-Qaeda suspects in US custody. Another source said the report would "deeply shock" people in the US.
Dianne Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, has said the report will reveal "brutality that stands in stark contrast to our values as a nation".
A third source told the Telegraph that tactics used during questioning were more savage than had been admitted to date, saying "they got medieval on his ass" about the treatment of Mohammed and another detainee.
Amrit Singh, a lawyer and author of Administration of Torture, which details the George W Bush administration's torture policy, said: "Given the lengths that Bush-era CIA officials went to cover up the truth, including destroying videotapes depicting waterboarding of prisoners, it comes as no surprise that the torture was more brutal than previously revealed.
"It is, however, something that the American public has a right to know about, and an obligation to reckon with, and these revelations only underscore the urgent need for release of the Senate intelligence committee report."
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14